work.”
“Okay, then can you meet me in the ditch for, like, five minutes?”
“Yeah, sure.”
“See you then.” As if copying Kailie, he also ducks his head and walks off.
T he ditch is one of the coolest places to play if you're small enough to fit in the culvert, because that leads to a storm drain that's got little rooms branching off it. Not sure why there are rooms, but they beg to be turned into secret hideouts. The only problem is, if it rains you'll drown, but since that's never happened, generation after generation of elementary schoolers hang out in there.
At the mouth of the culvert are two boulders, just the right height to sit on, facing each other. They allow you to sit low enough that you can't be seen from the sidewalk, and when I get there after school, Jean-Pierre is already sitting on one. I jump down and sit on the other. High pitched kid screams and shouts sound throughout my subdivision. The elementary school kids all got dropped off by the bus half an hour ago, but none are close by.
“How're you feeling?” he asks.
“Been better.”
“Listen, I didn't know whether I should come by or message you on Facebook or what.”
“I think I'm done with Facebook right now.”
“Well, yeah. Look, I knew it wasn't you, okay? I never thought it was you.”
“Tatiana did.”
“Well, now you know another reason I don't do girlfriends.”
“So you can hook up with both me and Tatiana?”
“No. No way. I'm not like that. Tatiana thinks I should date her because she's all into this idea that black people should only date black people and so any white girl who hits on me is encroaching on her turf. Between her and my parents not wanting me to date at all...” he shrugs. “Tatiana and I have been over for months. I helped trash her locker.”
“So when you say you don't want a girlfriend, what does that mean? Do you see other people or-”
“Who cares what he means? He's wasting your time,” says a voice from up on the sidewalk.
I look up but the sun is in my eyes so I don't see who it is until he jumps down. It's the missionary, wearing jeans and his pea coat, his name tag still affixed to his breast.
“Hey,” he says to Jean-Pierre, “I'm her big brother.”
“Um, hi,” I say. “What are you doing here?”
“Got a ride from Bishop Montrose. My mission's over and I've got an hour before I need to leave for Sacramento to catch my flight home.”
“This is your brother?” says Jean-Pierre. “You've got a brother who's a Mormon?”
“Well... yeah. It's kind of a long story, and I don't actually know it.”
“I'm John,” says Elder Britton.
“You're a racist, cultist fanatic is what you are,” says Jean-Pierre.
“I am not a racist.”
“No, just your religion is. Are filthy black people allowed in your temples?”
“Yes, actually. That's why we've built some in Africa.”
“Oh that's riiiiight. 1978. Keeping up with the times. The whole Civil Rights movement looked like it might catch on?”
“What are you guys talkingabout?” I ask.
“Ask your brother.” Jean-Pierre shoots him a look of pure loathing.
“Yeah, okay,” says Elder Britton, “can I just ask what exactly you were saying to my sister when I got here?”
“Mind your own business.”
“I'm her brother, so it is my business.”
“Ooooh, the protective vibe.”
“Yeah, something like that. I see my sister with two black eyes and you saying you don't want her for a girlfriend, I'm gonna want to know what's going on.”
“This is between me and her.”
“Did he hit you?”
“No.” I spit the word out. “How stupid do you think I am?”
“Yeah,” says Jean-Pierre.
“I had to ask.”
“No you didn't,” I say.
“Madison, I'll catch you later.” Jean-Pierre clambers up onto the sidewalk and heads back towards campus where his car is in the parking lot.
Elder Britton glares after him. Then turns to me. “Okay, sorry if I came across the wrong
Wendi Zwaduk
Kelley Armstrong
Tom - Jack Ryan 09 Clancy
Sophie Shearer
Teresa Federici
Colin White, Laurie Boucke
Darcie Chan
Crymsyn Hart
Gary Franklin
Lisa Marie Rice